OASIS ELECTION AND VOTER SERVICES TECHNICAL COMMITTEE. ELECTION MARK-UP LANGUAGE (EML): e-voting PROCESS AND DATA REQUIREMENTS 1/5757

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1 OASIS ELECTION AND VOTER SERVICES TECHNICAL COMMITTEE ELECTION MARK-UP LANGUAGE (EML): e-voting PROCESS AND DATA REQUIREMENTS 1/5757

2 Document Control Abstract Date Version Status 29 Apr Committee Specification for TC approval Change History Date Version Status Editor/ Author 18 Mar Draft Committee Specification for public consultation Aoun Charbel (Main) John Ross (Co- Editor) Paul Spencer (Co-Editor) 13 Mar e Draft Committee Specification Aoun Charbel John Ross Paul Spencer 01 Mar d Draft Committee Specification Aoun Charbel John Ross Paul Spencer 18 Feb c Draft Committee Specification Aoun Charbel John Ross Paul Spencer 14 Feb 02 D3.2 Draft Committee Specification Aoun Charbel John Ross Paul Spencer 2/5757

3 OASIS Copyright Notices (A) (B) (C) "OASIS takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any intellectual property or other rights that might be claimed to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in this document or the extent to which any license under such rights might or might not be available; neither does it represent that it has made any effort to identify any such rights. Information on OASIS's procedures with respect to rights in OASIS specifications can be found at the OASIS website. Copies of claims of rights made available for publication and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementors or users of this specification, can be obtained from the OASIS Executive Director." "OASIS invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights which may cover technology that may be required to implement this specification. Please address the information to the OASIS Executive Director." "Copyright (C) The Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards [OASIS] (date). All Rights Reserved. This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to OASIS, except as needed for the purpose of developing OASIS specifications, in which case the procedures for copyrights defined in the OASIS Intellectual Property Rights document must be followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than English. The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be revoked by OASIS or its successors or assigns. This document and the information contained herein is provided on an "AS IS" basis and OASIS DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE." (D) "OASIS has been notified of intellectual property rights claimed in regard to some or all of the contents of this specification. For more information consult the online list of claimed rights." 3/5757

4 Table of Contents 1. Introduction 1.1 Business Drivers 1.2 Technical Drivers 1.3 The E&VS Committee 1.4 Challenge and Scope 1.5 Documentation Set 1.6 Conformance 1.7 Issues under consideration Audit Candidates Nomination fees Challenged/Provisional Ballot Boundary change Election rules for the generation of the ballot 1.8 Terminology 2. High-Level Election Process 2.1 The Human View 2.2 The Technology View 2.3 Outline 2.4 Process Description 2.5 Data Requirements 3. Security Considerations 3.1 Basic security requirements 3.2 Terms 3.3 Specific Security Requirements 3.4 Security Architecture 3.5 Internet voting security concerns Appendix A Glossary/Terminology Appendix B Internet Voting Security Concerns 4/5757

5 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 Business Drivers Voting is one of the most critical features in our democratic process. In addition to providing for the orderly transfer of power, it also cements the citizen s trust and confidence in an organization or government when it operates efficiently. In the past, changes in the election process have proceeded deliberately and judiciously, often entailing lengthy debates over even the most minute detail. These changes have been approached with caution because discrepancies with the election system threaten the very principles that make our society democratic. Times are changing. Society is becoming more and more web oriented and citizens, used to the high degree of flexibility in the services provided by the private sector and in the Internet in particular, are now beginning to set demanding standards for the delivery of services by governments using modern electronic delivery methods. Internet voting is seen as a logical extensions of Internet applications in commerce and government and in the wake of the United States 2000 general elections is among those solutions being seriously considered to replace older less reliable election systems. Increasing the range of available voting channels to better reflect the use of new communication technologies may help to address some of the practical barriers to voting. The implementation of Internet voting would allow increased access to the voting process for millions of potential voters. Higher levels of voter participation will lend greater legitimacy to the electoral process and should help to reverse the trend towards voter apathy that is fast becoming a feature of many democracies. However, it has to be recognized that the use of technology will not by itself correct this trend. Greater engagement of voters throughout the whole democratic process is also required. 1.2 Technical Drivers In the election industry today, there are a number of different services vendors around the world, all integrating different levels of automation, operating on different platforms and employing different architectures. With the global focus on e-voting systems and initiatives, the need for a consistent, auditable, automated election system has never been greater. The introduction of open standards for election solutions is intended to enable election officials around the world to build upon existing infrastructure investments to evolve their systems as new technologies emerge. This will 5/5757

6 simplify the election process in a way that was never possible before. Open election standards will aim to instill confidence in the democratic process among citizens and government leaders alike, particularly within emerging democracies where the responsible implementation of the new technology is critical. 1.3 The E&VS Committee OASIS, the XML interoperability consortium, formed the Election and Voter Services Technical Committee to standardize election and voter services information using XML. The committee is focused on delivering a reliable, accurate and trusted XML specification (Election Markup Language (EML)) for the structured interchange of data among hardware, software and service vendors who provide election systems and services. EML, the first XML specification of its kind, will provide a uniform, secure and verifiable way to allow e-voting systems to interact as new global election processes evolve and are adopted. The Committee s mission statement is: Develop a standard for the structured interchange of data among hardware, software, and service providers who engage in any aspect of providing election or voter services to public or private organizations. The services performed for such elections include but are not limited to voter role/membership maintenance (new voter registration, membership and dues collection, change of address tracking, etc.), citizen/membership credentialing, redistricting, requests for absentee/expatriate ballots, election calendaring, logistics management (polling place management), election notification, ballot delivery and tabulation, election results reporting and demographics. The primary function of an electronic voting system is to capture voter preferences reliably and report them accurately. Capture is a function that occurs between a voter (individual person) and an e-voting system (machine). It is critical that any election system be able to prove that a voter s choice is captured correctly and anonymously, and that the vote is not subject to tampering. Dr. Michael Ian Shamos, a PhD Researcher who worked on 50 different voting systems since 1980 and reviewed the election statutes in half the US states, summarized a list of fundamental requirements, or six commandments, for electronic voting systems: 1- Keep each voter s choice an inviolable secret. 2- Allow each eligible voter to vote only once, and only for those offices for which he/she is authorized to cast a vote. 3- Do not permit tampering with voting system, nor the exchange of gold for votes. 4- Report all votes accurately 5- The voting system shall remain operable throughout each election. 6/5757

7 6- Keep an audit trail to detect any breach of [2] and [4] but without violating [1]. In addition to these business and technical requirements, the committee was faced with the additional challenges of specifying a requirement that was: Multinational: our aim is to have these standards adopted globally Effective across the different voting regimes. e.g. proportional representation or first past the post. Multilingual our standards will need to be flexible enough to accommodate the various languages and dialects and vocabularies. Adaptable our aim is to provide a specification that is resilient enough to support elections in both the private and public sectors. Secure The standards must provide security that protects election data and detects any attempt to corrupt it. The Committee followed these guidelines and operated under the general premise that any data exchange standards must be evaluated with constant reference to the public trust. 1.4 Challenge and Scope The goal of the committee is to develop an Election Markup Language. This is a set of data and message definitions described as a set of XML schemas and covering a wide range of transactions that occur during an election. To achieve this, the committee decided that it required a common terminology and definition of election processes that could be understood internationally. The committee therefore started by defining the generic election process models described here. These processes are illustrative, covering the vast majority of election types and forming a basis for defining the Election Markup Language itself. EML has been designed such that elections that do not follow this process model should still be able to use EML as a basis for the exchange of election-related messages. EML is meant to assist and enable the election process and does not require any changes to traditional methods of conducting elections. The extensibility of EML makes it possible to adjust to various e-democracy processes without affecting the process, as it simply enables the exchange of data between the various election processes in a standardized way. The solution outlined in this document is non-proprietary and will work as a template for any e-voting system. The objective is to introduce a uniform and reliable way to allow election systems to interact with each other. The proposed standard is intended to reinforce public confidence in the election process and to 7/5757

8 facilitate the job of democracy builders by introducing guidelines for the selection or evaluation of future election systems. Figure 1A: Relationship overview 1.5 Documentation Set To meet our objectives, the committee has defined a process model that reflects the generic processes for running elections in a number of different international jurisdictions. The processes are illustrative, covering the vast amount of election types and scenarios. The next step was then to isolate all the individual data items that are required to make each of these processes function. From this point, our approach has been to use EML as a simple and standard way of exchanging this data across different electronic platforms. Elections that do not follow the process model can still use EML as a basis for the exchange of election-related messages at interface points that are more appropriate to their specific election processes. Finally, the committee will be conducting pilot studies using the prototype EML standard to test it s effectiveness across a number of different international jurisdictions. The committee document set will include: Voting Process and Data Requirements (This Document): A general and global study of the electoral process. Introduces the transition from a complete human process by defining the data structure to be exchanged and where needed. An EML schema is introduced and clearly marked. 8/5757

9 EML Specifications: This consists of a library of XML schemas used in EML. The XML schemas define the formal structures of the election data that needs to be exchanged. Scenarios: A selected set of scenarios with variations in election type / country. The objective of the scenarios is to show how documents 1 and 2 can be used in practice. Each scenario will be made of two documents specific to the country and type of election under discussion. 1.6 Conformance To conform to this specification, a system must implement those parts that are relevant to it, at the interfaces for which conformance is claimed. A procurement speciation for a system that conforms to EML may specify what interfaces are required to conform to EML, in which case the procurement speciation shall specify the version number of the schemas to be used. For example, in the future, the specification for an election list system might specify that a conforming system must implement the following schemas: Schema Accept Generate EML110 v1.0 EML310 v2.0, v2.1 EML320 v1.0, v2.0 v2.0 EML330 v1.1 EML340 v1.0 EML350 v1.0 EML360 v1.3 A conforming system will then conform to the relevant parts of this specification and the accompanying schemas. 9/5757

10 1.7 Issues under consideration The following issues are under consideration by the committee for future versions of this document Audit In the classical meaning, Audit is the process by which a legal body consisting of election officers and candidates representatives can examine the process used by which the vote is collected and counted to prove the authenticity of the result. The election officer should be able to: Account for all the ballots and a count of ballots issues should match the total of ballots cast, spoiled and unused. Prove that voted ballots received are secure from any alteration. Provide mechanism to allow a recount when result is contested Allow for multiple observers to witness all the process. Systems that conform to EML must provide compatible auditing facilities Candidates Nomination Fees Many elections require a nomination fee from the candidates, this issue is currently not covered by this specification, the technical committee solicits views on the following. Should it fall under the TC committee terms of reference? If so, do we need to account for the fees into our schemas? Does this fall under the scrutiny process that is handled by the election officer to evaluate a nomination application if it meets the rules or not? If we include the fees as part of the schema, should be also include other nomination requirements like variation of age, number of signatures collected etc Challenged/Provisional Ballot We need to have more information about the scenarios where a ballot or voter is challenged. In particular, input is solicited on the following: The scenario of a voter challenged in public elections. The scenario of a ballot challenged in public elections. 10/5757

11 Other questions arising are, does an attended ballot as defined in the UK fall in the same category as a voter/ballot challenge or is this different scenario? Is a tendered ballot the same as the attended or challenged ballot or other rules apply? Boundary change Many elections are organized within geographical or organizational boundaries, this issue is currently not covered by this specification. The technical committee solicits views on the following: How a boundary change or redistricting is handled in details? How different it is between various nations? Do we need to define schemas? and if yes, what schemas are needed? Election rules for the generation of the ballot To create balloting information, input data is needed about the election, the options/candidates available and the eligible voters; EML provides the standard for exchanging such information between e-systems. However, a mapping process is required in the e-voting system to map the various raw input data into output data for one ballot for one voter, this document uses the term election rules to define how this mapping is to be done in a particular election. When a precise election rule is needed is it identified by the election rule ID. The current document assumes election rules themselves are implementation specific, thus by specifying the election rule ID the e-system can do the necessary mapping between voter, candidate, election and bylaws of the election to produce the ballot. The technical committee solicits views on the following: The need to generalize the election rules processes in more detail The need to standardized the data and EML schema for election rules If a schema for the election rules is required, the technical committee solicits input on, the rules to be used when generating a ballot and how a ballot is to be associated to a voter 11/5757

12 1.8 Terminology At the outset of our work, it was clear that the committee would need to rationalize the different terms that are commonly used to describe the election process. Terms used to describe the election process, such as ballot and candidate, carry different meanings in different countries even those speaking the same language. In order to develop a universal standard, it is essential to create universal definitions for the different elements of the election process. See appendix A for the terms used by the committee in this document. Our approach was to regard elections as involving Contests between Candidates or Options which aggregate to give results in different Elections. In practice however, electoral authorities would often run a number of different elections during a defined time period. This phenomenon is captured in our terminology as an Election Event. The model below uses a British context to describe our approach in general terms. Figure 1B: The Election Hierarchy Election Event Parliamentary Elections Each constituency or district would hold contests between different candidates who will run for the post of Member of Parliament for the area. This contest would form the lowest unit of competition for these elections Elections Local Government Elections District A: Candidate x Candidate y Candidate z Councillor City Mayoral Election Similar to the Parliamentary Election, this election would consist of different contests within the cities boundaries. In this case however, the candidates for each contest are the same and the results at the contest level would decide the outcome of the election. Contests British General Elections 12/5757

13 In the detailed example below, there is an election event called the Union Annual Election. This comprises two elections, one for the National Executive Committee (NEC) and one for the International Liaison Committee (ILC). Three positions are being selected for each committee, as a result, each election is made up of three contests. In region 1 (R1), the contest for each election has two options (or candidates). Figure 1c below shows the three ballots (one for each region). The ballot is personal to the voter and presents the options available to that voter. It also allows choices to be made. During the election exercise, each voter in region 1 receives only the region 1. This ballot will contain the candidates for the (R1) contest for each of the two elections. Figure1C: Union annual election 13/5757

14 2. HIGH-LEVEL ELECTION PROCESS Chapter 2 describes two complementary high level process models of an election exercise, based on the human and technical views of the processes involved. It is intended to identify all the generic steps involved in the process and highlight all the areas where data is to be exchanged. (Figure A. describes a model of the human process while Figure B attempts to replicate this model in electronic version) 2.1 Figure 2A: High Level Model The Human View Election Register Voter VOTERS Nomination Process Candidate Nomination Response Decision CANDIDATES Candidate Nomination Voter Registration General Voters Data Repository Comm with Oher Repository communicate with v oter Accepted Nominees Repository Eligible Voters Repository f or this Election Change of Address or Other Repository Other - Voters Repository Candidate List Election List ELECTION VOTING Election Processe s CANDIDATES VOTERS VOTING Votes Repository Audit RESULTS RESULTS AU D I T AU D I T Count Votes Scrutiny Analy se Votes/ Results RESULT 14/5757

15 2.2 Figure 2B: High-Level Model The Technical View Election Event Nominations 310 -Voter Registration Response Candidates DB Voter DB Inter DB Other DB Candidate List Election List Polling Information Generic Channel Options Distribution System Voter Channel Gateway Postal / Paper Ballot Audit Admin Electronic Ballot Physical Gateway Vote Casting Votes Demographic Information HelpDesk ELECTION CANDIDATES VOTERS VOTING RESULTS AUDIT Counting System Count / Result Scrutiny Result Report Analysis 15/5757

16 2.3 Outline This high-level process model is derived from real world election experience and is designed to accommodate all the feedback and input from the members of this committee. For clarity, the whole process can be divided into 3 major areas, pre election, election, post election; each area involves one or more election processes. This document allocates a range of numbers for each process. One or more XML schema will be specified to support each process, this ensure consistency with all the figures and the schemas required: Pre election Election (100) Candidates (200) Voters (300) Election Voting (400) Post election Results (500) Audit Analysis Some functions belongs to the whole process and not to a specific part: Administration Interface Help Desk Pre election Election (110) Candidates (200) o Nomination (210) o Response to nomination (220) o Candidate List (230) Voters (300) o Voter registration (310) o Inter database communication (320) o Election List (330) o Voter Communication Polling Information (340) Generic (350) Voter Notification (360) Election Voting (400) 16/5757

17 o Ballot (410) o Authentication (420) o Authentication Reply (430) o Vote and Casting (440) o Vote Confirmation (450) o Votes (460) Post election Counting (500) o Count Result (510) Audit Analysis Global functions Administration Interface Help Desk 17/5757

18 2.4 Process Descriptions Figure C: The Candidate Nomination Process Election CANDIDATES Voter Comms a Nomination b Candidates DB Scrutiny Response Candidates' List Voting This is the process of approving nominees as eligible candidates for certain positions in an election. Schemas 210, 220 are specifically applicable to candidates nominations and do not apply for issues like surveys, referendums. Irrespective of local regulations covering the nomination process, or the form in which a candidate s nomination is to be presented, i.e. (written/verbal), the committee anticipates that the process will conform to the following format: Voter Communications [350-Generic] declaring the opening of nominations will be used to reach the voters population eligible to vote for a position x in an election y. 18/5757

19 Interested parties will respond in the proper way satisfying the rules of nomination for this election with the objective of becoming running candidates. The response is done using schema 210. A nomination can be achieved in one of two ways: o One Nominee will reply by attaching to his nomination a list of x number of endorsers with their signature. o Each endorser will send a letter specifying Mr. X as his nominee for the position in question. The election officer(s) of this specific election will scrutinize those replies by making sure the requirements are fully met. Requirements for nomination vary from one election type to another, for example some elections require the nominee to: Pay fees, Have x number of endorsers, Be of a certain age, Be a citizen more than x number of years, Etc. Since the laws of nomination are very wide and cannot be enumerated we currently assume this function falls under the scrutiny of the election authority and outside the mission of this committee. Future versions of this document may look into those requirements and resulting schema. Selected eligible nominees will be communicated using schema 220. The outcome of this process is a list of accepted candidates that will be communicated using schema 230. It will be used to construct the contests and occurrence on the final ballot(s). 19/5757

20 Figure 2D: Voter Registration Election Event VOTERS Register to vote Change of Address Electoral Roll ER 320 -Other DB ER' Deduping, Death register, Motor vehicule, Police records, etc Polling Card Generic Channel Options Distribution System Fixed Election List b a b a Voting The centre of this process is the Electoral Roll Database or the voters database. The input into this Database is the outcome of communications between a voter and an Election Authority. The subject of this correspondence can vary from adding a voter to modifying a voter; deletion of a voter is considered as part of modification. 20/5757

21 This schema of data exchange is recommended irrelevant of the method a voter uses to supply his information. For example, a voter could register online or simply by completing a voter s form and posting the signed form. In the latter case, this schema is to be followed when converting the paper form into the electoral DB. Another potential communication or exchange of data is with other databases like another election authority, government body, etc. At a certain date, a subset of the voters DB is fixed from which the election list is generated [Fixed Election List 330]. The election list will include a list of all eligible voters/contest/elections for an election event. It is here that we also introduce the concept of voter communications. Under this category we divided them into three possible types of communications: - Channel options. - Polling Information. - Generic. The communication method between the Election Authority and the voters is outside the scope of this document, so is the application itself. This document does specify the data needed to be exchanged. 21/5757

22 Figure 2E: The Voting Process Election Rules Election Event Candidate List Election List Electronic Access Method Physical Access Method WAP Internet IVR Kiosk Various Communication Methods SMS Browser Gateway SMS Gateway Kiosk Gateway IVR Gateway WAP Gateway Physical Gateway The precise technique used for authentication of the registered voter will depend on the communications method used to cast the vote. No order in the voting process is required or implied by the order below Ballots Authentication reply Vote Confirmation Authenticationthat you are the registered voter Vote and Casting:Authentication and validation that the vote is genuine and is sealed. e-voting system - Privacy - Confidentiality - Security VOTES Votes Results We assumed various systems would be involved in providing the voting process and regard each system as an independent entity. As this figure shows, the voter will be voting using a choice of physical channels (Postal, Polling place, paper ballot) the Physical access methods, or the voter can vote using Electronic access methods where he/she will utilize a number of possible e-voting channels. Each channel may have a gateway acting as the translator between the voter terminal and the voting system. These gateways are in typical proprietary environments where 22/5757

23 PBX the following schemas are to be used: 410, 420, 430, 440 and 450. These schemas should function irrespective of the application or the suppliers favored choice of technology. Figure 2F: Vote Reporting 460. Votes RESULT Analysis System Counting System Count Scrutiny Final Result One of the post election items is the result. Others like Audit will be discussed further in the next version of this document. The voting system should communicate a bulk of data representing the votes to the counting system or the analysis system-using schema 460. The result by itself, which is the compilation of the 460, is to be communicated by the schema 510. Recount can be very simply accommodated by a re-run of the schema 460, on the same or another counting system. The investigative requirements of a recount are to be covered in a future version of this specification as part of the audit function. The votes schema 460 also feeds into an analysis system, which is used to provide for demographic or other types of election reports. The output of the analysis system is outside the scope of this document. 23/5757

24 Other possible specifications, which could make use of the basic Vote and Count schemas include, specifications dealing with reporting of election results like the voter news services or AP reporting votes schema. 24/5757

25 2.5 Data Requirements The diagrams and pictures above are meant to give a clear visual presentation of the overall process and detail main sections. Where a schema is identified as necessary, a number of Format (NNN) is marked and below we will detail each schema in terms of data content. However while doing so we came across exceptions related to cultural divide, language, bylaws, different type of service possible etc. To limit the impact of these differences, the current specification limits itself to identifying a common set of data not related or affected by such differences. Thereby providing the core data that meets most election scenarios and something that meets most election requirements. The mandatory elements below are the minimum set of common data elements that must be present when the schema is used. All other elements are optional, which means the optional elements may, or may not, be present in a message using this schema. Any system that claims to support the schema must always generate mandatory elements and most be able to generate optional elements when required. Any system that claims to support the schema must always process all mandatory and optional elements correctly on reception. Note here that some of the optional data will be partly considered as required in one system and either optional or even not accepted in others. Data Protection legislation and Privacy regulations will play a major role in defining what is to be included and under which section. Format used to signal both types of data: Mandatory Text Optional Text In the absence of any National requirement specifying alternatives, the names and addresses shall conform to the xnal. An example of a name and address attributes are below: Name-Structure Title First Name Last Name Middle Name Maiden Name Suffix 25/5757

26 Address-Structure Address Line 1 Address Line 2 Street Name City Name Postcode Country Contact-Structure Home Telephone Work Telephone Personal Mobile Business Mobile Fax Preferred Method of Contact 110 Election Event Contains the data about an election. This is the starting point of the whole process. It is made of one or more contests over a period of time. ELECTION EVENT ID ELECTION EVENT NAME ELECTION EVENT DESCRIPTION ALLOWED channels (polling, internet, postal, sms, telephone, wap, kiosk, digital tv, others) ELECTIONS Election ID Election Name Election Description Election Starting Date Election Starting Time Election Ending Date Election Ending Time Contests repeats Contest ID Contest name Contest Description Contest Method of Vote (FPP, STV) Max Vote MIN Vote repeats Seal Language ID (ISO standard, multiple languages allowed) 26/5757

27 Any Candidate Nomination Describes the data used by a candidate to send in his nomination. Candidate Name Name-Structure Candidate Address Address-Structure Candidate Contact Info Contact-Structure Election id Election Name Contest id Contest Name Proposers (1 to n) n=number of maximum of endorsers required. Proposer Name Name-Structure Category (primary, secondary, other) Proposer Address Address-Structure Contact Info Contact-Structure Job Status or Title Affiliation Personal Profile or Biography Election Statement Seal Language ID Any Response to Nomination Candidate Name Name-Structure Candidate Address Address-Structure Contact Info Contact-Structure Election Name Contest Name Nomination accepted Yes/No Remark Affiliation Seal Language ID Any 27/5757

28 230 Candidate List Contest ID Contest Name Contest Description Candidates Candidate ID Candidate Name Candidate Affiliation repeats Seal Language ID Any Voter Registration Used for initial registration or changing of any of the voter data. The rules are applied in order to validate that someone has the right to vote. VOTER ID National/Local ID (Like Social Security Number, National Insurance Number, Driver License Number, etc ) Name Name-Structure Electoral Address Address-Structure Armed forces (Y/N) Proof of ID Mailing Address Address-Structure Mailing Contact Info Contact-Structure Date of Birth Effective Date Added Effective Date Removed Preferred language of voting Affiliation Date Submitted Time Submitted Previous Address Address-Structure Place of Birth Sex Ethnic group Special requests (visually impaired, disabled, need translator, etc ) 28/5757

29 Preferred method of vote (Postal, Polling, electronic) Seal Language ID Any 320 Inter Db a) ACTION REQUEST Transaction id Source ID Destination ID Action Action date Action time Voters 310-Voter Registration (per voter) Seal Language ID Any b) REPLY TO ACTION REQUEST Transaction id Source ID Destination ID Reply to ACTION (Y/N, string either or or both ) Action date Action time Voters 310-Voter Registration (per voter) Seal Language ID Any Election List It is a set of voters [310] associated to an election identifier and to a contest ID. OR Election ID Contest ID Election event 310-Voter Registration (per voter) repeats Election rule id Seal 29/5757

30 Language ID Any 30/5757

31 340 Polling Information Election Event id Election Event Name Election Event description Vote Starting Date Vote Starting Time Vote Ending Date Vote Ending Time Voter Number Name Name-Structure Mailing Address Address-Structure Contact Information Contact-Structure Election rule id Elections Election id Election name Election description Contests Contest id Contest name Contest description e-voting Information v-tokens v-token location Polling Station Name Polling Station Address URL Dial-in Tel Number Etc Message Seal Language ID Any NOTE: Outgoing or incoming communications can be in any order. 31/5757

32 350 a) Outgoing - Generic Communications Voter ID Transaction id Voter Name Name-Structure Mailing Address Address-Structure Contact Info Contact-Structure Election event Name Election Name Contest name Generic Message Return Address Address-Structure Return Contact Info Contact-Structure Seal Language ID Any 350 b) Incoming - Generic Communications Voter ID Transaction id Voter name Name-Structure Generic Message Contact Info Contact-Structure Mailing Address Address-Structure Election event Name Election Name Contest name Seal Language ID Any 360 a) Outgoing Channel Options Voters will be notified of an election with related information and are required to select method of vote. Consists of outgoing generic communications with an additional mandatory element called Allowed channels. Voter ID Transaction id Voter Name 32/5757

33 Name-Structure Mailing Address Address-Structure Contact Info Contact-Structure Election event Name Election Name Contest name Generic Message Return Address Address-Structure Return Contact Info Contact-Structure Seal Language ID Any Allowed Voting Channels (allow multiple selection) Polling Internet Postal Sms Telephone Wap Kiosk Digital Tv others 360 b) Incoming Channel Options Incoming generic communication with an additional mandatory element called preferred method of vote. Note: (This message may be sent in response to the message 360a. It can also be an unsolicited message from a voter wishing to select a preferred voting channel.) Preferred method of vote Voter ID Transaction id Voter name Name-Structure Generic Message Contact Info Contact-Structure Mailing Address Address-Structure Election event Name Election Name Contest name 33/5757

34 Seal Language ID Any 34/5757

35 410 - Ballot Election Event ID Election Event Name Election Event description Ballot Ballot id Elections Election ID Election Name Election description Contests Contest ID Contest Name Contest Description Voting information Rotation Max Votes Min Votes Maximum write-ins Method of Voting message Options Option ID Option Name Option Affiliation repeats WRITE-IN options WI-option ID WI-option Name WI-option Affiliation repeats Message OR Election rule id Voters Voter id Voter name v-token Contact details Contact-structure Message Seal Language ID 35/5757

36 Any 420 Authentication The mechanism of ensuring that a voter has the right to cast a vote for a specific ballot. Referring to Figure 3a it is assumed a v-token is generated according to mechanism and criteria defined. Transaction id Channel ID V-token Login Method Language ID Audit Information Channel Type (P, I, W, etc) Channel ID (could be an IP address or anything else) IP Address Operating System information Type Version Location Counting System information Type Version Location Batch Sequence Seal Language ID Any 430 Authentication Reply Respond to authentication request to allow or deny access. Transaction id Authenticated (Y/N) Remark (Reason why not authenticated.) Or Ballot id Ballot schema (1 ballot only) Seal Language ID Any 440 Cast Vote 36/5757

37 V-token Seal (When the v-token is present, the seal proves that V-token is associated and bound to a certain vote indefinitely.) Election Event ID Election Event Name Election ID Election Name Contest ID Contest Name Selection Seal v-token Option ID/name OR WRITE-IN option NAME Option value or v-token or both Audit Information Channel Type (P, I, W, etc) IP Address Operating System information Type Version Location Counting System information Type Version Location Batch Sequence Seal Language ID Any 450 Vote Confirmation Is meant to be a certain mechanism to respond to voter to confirm his vote was successfully and safely recorded. Whether the confirmation is a thank you message or a confirmation number that allows him to log to a certain page to check the status of his vote as in voted or not with timestamp but not the content of his vote. So again the content of the confirmation is system specific. Message 37/5757

38 V-token Confirmation reference Seal Language ID Any 38/5757

39 460 Votes It is a collection of sealed votes/contest. 440 cast Vote repeat Seal Language ID Any 510 Count/Result Election event id Election event name Election id Election name Election rule id Contests Contest ID Contest Name Max vote Options Option id Option name Affiliation Valid Votes Rejected votes (mandatory reasons, optional reasons) Abstentions (blank) Seal Language ID Any 39/5757

40 3. SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS 3.1 Basic security requirements The security governing an election starts way before the actual vote casting. It is not only a matter of securing the location where the votes are stored, and does not end there. An intensive analysis into security related concerns and possible threats that could in one way or another affect the election event resulted into the following: Security considerations of e-voting systems include: Authentication: This is checking the truth of a claim of identity or right to vote. It aims to answer questions such as Who are you and do you have the right to vote? There are two aspects of authentication in e-voting systems: Checking a claim of identity. Checking a right to vote. In informal e-voting systems the two aspects of authentication, checking a claim of identity and checking a right to vote, may be closely linked. Having checked the identity of the voter, a list of authorized voters may be used to check the right to vote. In many elections and contest the rules under which the election takes place force a clear separation between checking of the claim of identity, which may be done some time before the ballot takes place, from checking the right to vote at the time of the vote is cast In the physical voting world, authentication of identity is made by using verifiable characteristics of the voter like handwritten signatures, address, etc and physical evidence like physical ids, driver s license, employee ID, Passport, etc. all of this can be termed physical credential. This is often done at the time an electoral register is set up which can be well before the actual ballot takes place. Checking the authenticity of the right to vote may be performed at various stages in the process. Initial authenticity checks may be done related to the voter s identity during registration. However, at the time of casting a vote, it will be always be necessary to check the right to vote, unless the rules of the election allow the identity of the voter to be reveled, it will not 40/5757

41 be necessary to check the physical identity of the voter. Most public election systems require that the verification of the voter at the time of casting of a vote needs to be done anonymously without a direct link to the voter s identity. In order to carry out this final check on the right to vote at election time there is a need to be able to represent the right to vote to the election system for which the true identity of the voter remains anonymous. Thus without it being possible to trace the right to vote back to an identified voter. Finally, when counting and auditing votes it is necessary to be able to check that the votes are placed by those whose right to vote has been authenticated. Public democratic elections in particular will place specific demands on the trust and quality of the authentication data. Because of this and because different implementations will use different mechanisms to provide the voter credential, precise mechanisms are outside the scope of this document. Privacy/Confidentiality: This is concerned with ensuring information about voters and how votes are cast is not revealed except as necessary to count and audit the votes. It must not be possible to find out how a particular voter voted (see also discussion on anonymity above). Also, before an election is completed, it should not be possible to obtain a count of how votes are being cast. Where the user is remote from the voting system then there is a danger of voting information being revealed to someone listening in to the communications. This is commonly stopped by encrypting data as it passes over the communications network. The other major threat to the confidentiality of votes is within the system that is collecting votes. It should not be possible for malicious software that can collect votes, to infiltrate the voting system. Risks of malicious software can be reduced by physical controls and careful audit of the system operation. Furthermore, the results of voting should not be accessible until the election is complete. This can be achieved by very careful control over the voting system but is much to guarantee if votes are stored encrypted until the election is complete. 41/5757

42 Integrity: This is concerned with ensuring that ballot options and votes are correct and unaltered. Having established the choices within a particular ballot and the voter community to which these choices apply, the correct ballot information must be presented to each voter. Also, when a vote is placed it is important that the vote is kept correctly until required for counting and auditing purposes. Using authentication check codes on information being sent to and from a remote voter s terminal over a communications network, generally protects attacks on the integrity of ballot information and votes. Integrity of the ballot and voting information held within computer systems can be protected to a degree by physical controls and careful audit of the system operation. However, much greater confidence in the integrity of voting information can be achieved by using digital signatures or some similar cryptographic protection to seal the data. Non-repudiation: This is concerned with extending the integrity of a vote and its relation to an authenticated right to vote to ensure that once a vote has been cast it is genuine. Once a vote has been cast in accordance with the rules it should not be possible to change or withdraw that vote. For a vote to be non-repudiable it is necessary to be able to ensure that a right to vote cannot be misused (i.e. is authenticated see above), but also that, depending on the rules of the election, a vote can only be caste once and cannot be altered, even by the voter. For data, such as a vote, to be non-repudiable is generally considered necessary to include a trusted source of time into the integrity and authentication protection. Thus, there is a clear ordering of events and in the case of a known compromise of passwords or other information used for authentication, it is clear whether the vote was cast before or after the compromise. 3.2 Terms The following security terms are used in this document: Identity Authentication identification: the means by which a voter registration system checks the validity of the claimed identity. Right to vote authentication: the means by which the voting system checks the validity of a voters right to vote. V-token: the means by which a voter proves to an e-voting system that he/she has the right to vote in a contest. 42/5757

43 Vote sealing: the means by which the integrity of voting data (ballot choices, vote cast against a given v-token) can be protected (e.g. using a digital signature or other authentication code) so that it can be proved that a voter s authentication and one or more vote are related. 3.3 Specific Security Requirements Electronic voting systems have some very specific security requirements that include: 1. Only legitimate voters are allowed to vote (i.e. voters must be authenticated as having the right to cast a vote). 2. Only one set of choices is allowed per voter, per contest. 3. The vote cannot be altered from the voter s intention. 4. The vote may not be observed until the proper time. 5. The voting system must be accountable and auditable. 6. Information used to authenticate the voter or his/her right to vote should be protected against misuse (e.g. passwords should be protected from copying). 7. The voter s actual identity may need to be anonymous (i.e. some legal requirements of various countries conflict. Some countries require that the vote cannot be tracked back to the voter s identity, while others mandate that it must be possible to track every vote a legitimate voters identity). 8. The casting options available to the voter must be genuine. 9. Proof that all genuine votes has been accurately counted. There are some specific complications that arise with respect to security and electronic voting that include: 1. Several technologies may be employed, in the voting environment. 2. The voting environment may be made up of systems from multiple vendors. 3. A voter may have the option to vote through alternative delivery channels (i.e. physically presenting themselves at a poling station, by post, by electronic means). 4. The voting systems need to be able to meet various national legal requirements and local voting rules for both private and public elections. 5. Need to verify that all votes are recorded properly without having access to the original input. 6. The mechanism used for voter authentication may vary depending on legal requirements of the contest, the voter registration and the e- voting systems for private and public elections. 43/5757

44 7. The user may be voting from an insecure environment (e.g. a PC with no anti-virus checking or user access controls). Objectives of this security specification include: 1. Be an open specification. 2. Not to restrict the authentication mechanisms provided by e-voting systems. 3. Specify the security characteristic required of an implementation, allowing for freedom in its precise implementation. 3.4 Security Architecture The architecture proposed in this paper is designed to meet the security requirements and objectives detailed above, allowing for the security complications of e-voting systems listed. The architecture is illustrated in figure E below, and consists of distinct areas: Voter identification and registration. Right to vote authentication. Protecting exchanges with remote voters. Validating Right to Vote and contest vote sealing Vote confidentiality. Candidate list Integrity Vote counting accuracy Voting system security controls Voter identification and registration: The Voter identification and registration is used to identify an entity (e.g. person) for the purpose of registering the person has a right to vote in one or more contests, thus identifying legitimate voters. The security characteristics for voter identification are to be able to authenticate the identity of the legal person allowed to vote in a contest and to authenticate each person s voting rights. The precise method of voter identification is not defined in this standard, as it will be specific to particular voting environments, and designed to meet specific legal requirements, private or public election and contest rules. The voter registration system may interact with the e-voting system and other systems to define how to authenticate a voter for a particular contest. Voter identification and registration ensures that only legitimate voters are allowed to register for voting. Successful voter registration will eventually result in legitimate voters being given a means of proving their right to vote to the voting system in a contest. Depending on national requirements or specific voting 44/5757

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